1.Long-term Prognosis in Patients With Viable Myocardium in Left Ventricular Aneurysm and Arrhythmia Asseeed by18F-FDG Imaging
Yijian YANG ; Cuihong HOU ; Congna TIAN ; Weixue WANG ; Hongxing WEI ; Min ZHAO ; Feng GUO ; Kewei CHU ; Qinghai GENG ; Qi WANG ; Nan JIANG ; Zongyao ZHANG ; Lixia ZHANG ; Jian ZHANG ; Yueqin TIAN ; Xiaoli ZHANG ; Xiujie LIU
Chinese Circulation Journal 2015;(12):1152-1156
Objective: To assess the impact of viable myocardium in left ventricular aneurysm (LVA) and ventricular arrhythmia on prognosis of LVA patients.
Methods: A total of one hundred and sixty LVA patients who received99Tcm-MIBI SPECT and18F-FDG PET were enrolled, including 139 male and 21 female with the mean age of (58 ± 10) years.There were 42 (26.3%) patients combining ventricular arrhythmia. LVEDV, LVESV and LVEF were detected. Semi-quantitative analysis of myocardium perfusion imaging was conducted, viable myocardium in aneurysm was deifned as the perfusion-metabolism mismatch score (MMS) ≥ 2.0. According to myocardium viability, the patients were divided into 2 groups: No viability group,n=97 and With viability group,n=63;based on ventricular arrhythmia, the patients were divided into another 4 groups: Group①, viability-, ventricular arrhythmia-, n=68, Group②, viability-, ventricular arrhythmias+,n=29, Group③, viability+, ventricular arrhythmias-,n=50 and Group④, viability+,ventricular arrhythmias+,n=13. The average follow-up time was (50 ± 7) months, the end point was cardiac death. The survival curve was obtained by Kaplan-Meier method and survival rates were compared by Log-rank analysis.
Results: The mean LVEF in 160 patients was (34 ± 11) %, cardiac death occurred in 19 (11.9%) patients. Long-term survival rates in Groups①,② and③ were 94.1%, 89.7% and 86.0%, respectively,P>0.05; while in Group④, the survival rate was 61.5%, which was lower than the other 3 groups,P=0.004. Multivariate Cox regression analysis showed that female (HR=5.101, 95% CI 1.853-14.044, P=0.002), GPET-ESV (HR=1.009, 95% CI 1.002-1.015,P=0.013), interaction between MMS and ventricular arrhythmia (HR=1.368, 95%CI 1.113-1.681,P=0.003) were independent risk factors for cardiac death;while surgical treatment (HR=0.199, 95% CI 0.054-0.742,P=0.016) could decrease the risk of cardiac death.
Conclusion: Patients with viable aneurysm and ventricular arrhythmia had poor long-term prognosis; while early and active treatment is needed for them (surgery with anti-arrhythmic therapy).
2.Unroofed coronary sinus syndrome: A case report.
Cuihong TIAN ; Wen SU ; Zhaowei ZHU ; Shenghua ZHOU ; Zhenfei FANG ; Xinqun HU
Journal of Central South University(Medical Sciences) 2020;45(1):91-95
Unroofed coronary sinus syndrome (UCSS), also named coronary sinus septal defect, is a rare type of atrial septal defect with the incidence less than 1% of the total number of atrial septal defects. It is caused by incomplete formation of left atrial venous folds during embryonic development. Here we reported a patient with UCSS, who was treated in the Second Xiangya Hospital of Central South University. The patient was 50 years old and the main clinical manifestations were fatigue and shortness of breath after repeated exercise. Color Doppler echocardiography showed coronary sinus dilatation (17 mm×14 mm), indicating the possibility of permanent left superior vena cava. Pulmonary angiography showed that the left ventricle and coronary sinus were developed at the same time while the atrial septum was intact after the development of the left atrium, followed by the right atrium and right ventricle, indicating a partial anomalous pulmonary venous drainage (intracardiac type). Finally, the cardiac computed tomograhic angiography showed that 4 pulmonary veins and permanent left superior vena cava (PLSVC) went into the left atrium and the coronary sinus, respectively, while the coronary sinus septum was absent and the PLSVC was connected with the left atrium. The patient was later treated with the correction of non-parietal sinus syndrome in the Cardiovascular Surgery Department of our hospital.
Coronary Sinus
;
Heart Atria
;
Heart Septal Defects, Atrial
;
Humans
;
Middle Aged
;
Vena Cava, Superior